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much greater than the number of registered Bosnian standing stones. Many of them have been lost, destroyed, used for construction or simply have not been found. Figure 2. Bosnian standing stones Tunnels and Caves as Sources of Negative Ions While Bosnian standing stones and obelisks exclusively have an outward effect, favourable ionisation can be elt within the hollow spaces of a church, a mosque and a pyramid. Apart from underground water lows, the pyramid utilises an additional source of negative ions: a natural cave, which enhances the beneficial ionisation effect of the stones are made of crystal material and are located above underground water flows, but they do not have the pointed top made of conductive material and therefore have less power to ionise air. This power deficiency was solved by erecting a larger number of megaliths in some areas, which increased the total pyramid. The Pyramid of Cheops has a cave (called "the Grotto"), located at its base within granite rock, and the Pyramid of the Sun at Teotihuacan, Mexico, was built on top of a cave which was only discovered in 1970. Any pyramid which does not contain a cave is connected . by a tunnel to a remote cave. TEGOVINA ri Underground tunnels ,* > ol beneath pyramids serve as Le “artificial” caves; spending time in them is very good for “ 4 4° «© © one’s health. Results of radar ’ TP > BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA — um CROATIA ADRIATIC SEA Figure 3. Positioning and density of Bosnian standing stones power. The ere The Bosnian standing BOSNIA AND HER, stones (figs 2 and 3) belong 4 to that group. They are » unique monumental stone *« blocks which are densely “ * =" . .s « « spread over the territory of » * Bosnia and Herzegovina, - a * J southern parts of Croatia, . western Montenegro and CROATIA. southwestern Serbia. "= i Standing stone blocks are ADRIATIC 5 signs of a common national SEA custom, and as tombstones they are a mark of the mediaeval culture in those Figure 3. Positioning and ¢ regions. However, they are stones the heritage and autochthonous treasury of an ancient civilisation whose identity and time-frame remain unknown to archaeologists and historians (see fig. 3). Dubravko Lovrenovic, PhD, a member of the Committee for Preservation of National Monuments of Bosnia and Herzegovina, estimates that there are over 100,000 standing stones in Bosnia and Herzegovina alone. Although these standing stones are as a rule scattered and many have been relocated, and the accompanying barrows have been rebuilt many times, the stones are found in streaks or lines. Almost without exception, the direction of these streaks is from south to north. It is estimated that the real number of stone blocks is td —_—= - wort . Results of radar Pj . ‘2 ¥ measurements on the Giza ' % Plateau, conducted by b . Egyptian geophysicists *.\" Abbas Mohamed Abbas, El- . SERBIA said A. El-Sayed, Fathy A. 2 Shaaban and Tarek Abdel- * “a Hafez, were published in the Egyptian National Research lensity of Bosnian standing Institute of Astronomy and Geophysics NRIAG Journal of Geophysics (special edition 2006, pp. 1-16; see paper at http://tinyurl.com/pbyltp). Three hundred and fifty metres southeast of the Pyramid of Cheops, the Egyptian geophysicists registered the signal of a potential tunnel. The dielectric values of the underground structures are presented in fig. 4 (sourced from the abovementioned paper, p. 13). The electric capacity (C) of a conductor which is ocated in the isolator of the dielectric constant (€) is: C = €Co, where Cy represents its capacity in a vacuum. The arger the dielectric constant of the material, the larger he capacity of the capacitor. With a vacuum, € = 1; with hydrogen, € = 1.2; with oxygen, € = 1.5; with silicon, € = 4.5; with limestone, € = 4-8; with water, € = 81. of to 46 ¢ NEXUS JUNE — JULY 2009 www.nexusmagazine.com